Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) M. Bhatia
Request for Comments: 7166 Alcatel-Lucent
Obsoletes: 6506 V. Manral
Category: Standards Track Ionos Corp.
ISSN: 2070-1721 A. Lindem
Ericsson
March 2014
Supporting Authentication Trailer for OSPFv3
Abstract
Currently, OSPF for IPv6 (OSPFv3) uses IPsec as the only mechanism
for authenticating protocol packets. This behavior is different from
authentication mechanisms present in other routing protocols (OSPFv2,
Intermediate System to Intermediate System (IS-IS), RIP, and Routing
Information Protocol Next Generation (RIPng)). In some environments,
it has been found that IPsec is difficult to configure and maintain
and thus cannot be used. This document defines an alternative
mechanism to authenticate OSPFv3 protocol packets so that OSPFv3 does
not depend only upon IPsec for authentication.
The OSPFv3 Authentication Trailer was originally defined in RFC 6506.
This document obsoletes RFC 6506 by providing a revised definition,
including clarifications and refinements of the procedures.
Status of This Memo
This is an Internet Standards Track document.
This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
(IETF). It represents the consensus of the IETF community. It has
received public review and has been approved for publication by the
Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG). Further information on
Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 5741.
Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7166.
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RFC 7166 Authentication Trailer for OSPFv3 March 20141. Introduction
Unlike Open Shortest Path First version 2 (OSPFv2) [RFC2328], OSPF
for IPv6 (OSPFv3) [RFC5340] does not include the AuType and
Authentication fields in its headers for authenticating protocol
packets. Instead, OSPFv3 relies on the IPsec protocols
Authentication Header (AH) [RFC4302] and Encapsulating Security
Payload (ESP) [RFC4303] to provide integrity, authentication, and/or
confidentiality.
[RFC4552] describes how IPv6 AH and ESP extension headers can be used
to provide authentication and/or confidentiality to OSPFv3.
However, there are some environments, e.g., Mobile Ad Hoc Networks
(MANETs), where IPsec is difficult to configure and maintain; this
mechanism cannot be used in such environments.
[RFC4552] discusses, at length, the reasoning behind using manually
configured keys, rather than some automated key management protocol
such as Internet Key Exchange version 2 (IKEv2) [RFC5996]. The
primary problem is the lack of a suitable key management mechanism,
as OSPFv3 adjacencies are formed on a one-to-many basis and most key
management mechanisms are designed for a one-to-one communication
model. This forces the system administrator to use manually
configured Security Associations (SAs) and cryptographic keys to
provide the authentication and, if desired, confidentiality services.
Regarding replay protection, [RFC4552] states that:
Since it is not possible using the current standards to provide
complete replay protection while using manual keying, the proposed
solution will not provide protection against replay attacks.
Since there is no replay protection provided, there are a number of
vulnerabilities in OSPFv3 that have been discussed in [RFC6039].
While techniques exist to identify ESP-NULL packets [RFC5879], these
techniques are generally not implemented in the data planes of OSPFv3
routers. This makes it very difficult for implementations to examine
OSPFv3 packets and prioritize certain OSPFv3 packet types, e.g.,
Hello packets, over the other types.
This document defines a mechanism that works similarly to OSPFv2
[RFC5709] to provide authentication to OSPFv3 packets and solves the
problems related to replay protection and deterministically
disambiguating different OSPFv3 packets as described above.
Bhatia, et al. Standards Track [Page 3]

RFC 7166 Authentication Trailer for OSPFv3 March 2014
This document adds support for the Secure Hash Algorithms (SHAs)
defined in the US NIST Secure Hash Standard (SHS), which is specified
by NIST FIPS 180-4. [FIPS-180-4] includes SHA-1, SHA-224, SHA-256,
SHA-384, and SHA-512. The Hashed Message Authentication Code (HMAC)
authentication mode defined in NIST FIPS 198-1 [FIPS-198-1] is used.
1.1. Requirements
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [RFC2119].
1.2. Summary of Changes from RFC 6506
This document includes the following changes from RFC 6506 [RFC6506]:
1. Sections 2.2 and 4.2 explicitly state that the Link-Local
Signaling (LLS) block checksum calculation is omitted when an
OSPFv3 Authentication Trailer is used for OSPFv3 authentication.
The LLS data block is included in the authentication digest
calculation, and computation of a checksum is unnecessary.
Clarification of this issue was documented in an erratum.
2. Section 3 previously recommended usage of an expired key for
transmitted OSPFv3 packets when no valid keys existed. This
statement has been removed.
3. Section 4.5 includes a correction to the key preparation to use
the Protocol-Specific Authentication Key (Ks) rather than the
Authentication Key (K) as the initial key (Ko). This problem was
also documented in an erratum.
4. Section 4.5 also includes a discussion of the choice of key length
to be the hash length (L) rather than the block size (B). The
discussion of this choice was included to clarify an issue raised
in a rejected erratum.
5. Sections 4.1 and 4.6 indicate that sequence number checking is
dependent on OSPFv3 packet type in order to account for packet
prioritization as specified in [RFC4222]. This was an omission
from RFC 6506 [RFC6506].
6. Section 4.6 explicitly states that OSPFv3 packets with a
nonexistent or expired Security Association (SA) will be dropped.
7. Section 5 includes guidance on the precise actions required for an
OSPFv3 router providing a backward-compatible transition mode.
Bhatia, et al. Standards Track [Page 4]

RFC 7166 Authentication Trailer for OSPFv3 March 2014
AT-bit indicates that the AT is present. For other OSPFv3 packet
types, the OSPFv3 AT-bit setting from the OSPFv3 Hello/Database
Description setting is preserved in the OSPFv3 neighbor data
structure. OSPFv3 packet types that don't include an OSPFv3 Options
field will use the setting from the neighbor data structure to
determine whether or not the AT is expected.
0 1 2
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+--+-+--+-+-+--+-+-+--+-+--+
| | | | | | | | | | | | | |AT|L|AF|*|*|DC|R|N|MC|E|V6|
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+--+-+--+-+-+--+-+-+--+-+--+
Figure 2: OSPFv3 Options Field
The AT-bit, as shown in the figure above, MUST be set in all OSPFv3
Hello and Database Description packets that contain an Authentication
Trailer.
2.2. Basic Operation
The procedure followed for computing the Authentication Trailer is
much the same as those described in [RFC5709] and [RFC2328]. One
difference is that the LLS data block, if present, is included in the
Cryptographic Authentication computation.
The way the authentication data is carried in the Authentication
Trailer is very similar to how it is done in the case of [RFC2328].
The only difference between the OSPFv2 Authentication Trailer and the
OSPFv3 Authentication Trailer is that information in addition to the
message digest is included. The additional information in the OSPFv3
Authentication Trailer is included in the message digest computation
and is therefore protected by OSPFv3 Cryptographic Authentication as
described herein.
Consistent with OSPFv2 Cryptographic Authentication [RFC2328] and
Link-Local Signaling Cryptographic Authentication [RFC5613], checksum
calculation and verification are omitted for both the OSPFv3 header
checksum and the LLS data block when the OSPFv3 authentication
mechanism described in this specification is used.
2.3. IPv6 Source Address Protection
While OSPFv3 always uses the Router ID to identify OSPFv3 neighbors,
the IPv6 source address is learned from OSPFv3 Hello packets and
copied into the neighbor data structure [RFC5340]. Hence, OSPFv3 is
susceptible to Man-in-the-Middle attacks where the IPv6 source
address is modified. To thwart such attacks, the IPv6 source address
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RFC 7166 Authentication Trailer for OSPFv3 March 2014
will be included in the message digest calculation and protected by
OSPFv3 authentication. Refer to Section 4.5 for details. This is
different than the procedure specified in [RFC5709] but consistent
with [MANUAL-KEY].
3. OSPFv3 Security Association
An OSPFv3 Security Association (SA) contains a set of parameters
shared between any two legitimate OSPFv3 speakers.
Parameters associated with an OSPFv3 SA are as follows:
o Security Association Identifier (SA ID)
This is a 16-bit unsigned integer used to uniquely identify an
OSPFv3 SA, as manually configured by the network operator.
The receiver determines the active SA by looking at the SA ID
field in the incoming protocol packet.
The sender, based on the active configuration, selects an SA to
use and puts the correct Key ID value associated with the SA in
the OSPFv3 protocol packet. If multiple valid and active OSPFv3
SAs exist for a given interface, the sender may use any of those
SAs to protect the packet.
Using SA IDs makes changing keys while maintaining protocol
operation convenient. Each SA ID specifies two independent parts:
the authentication algorithm and the Authentication Key, as
explained below.
Normally, an implementation would allow the network operator to
configure a set of keys in a key chain, with each key in the chain
having a fixed lifetime. The actual operation of these mechanisms
is outside the scope of this document.
Note that each SA ID can indicate a key with a different
authentication algorithm. This allows the introduction of new
authentication mechanisms without disrupting existing OSPFv3
adjacencies.
o Authentication Algorithm
This signifies the authentication algorithm to be used with this
OSPFv3 SA. This information is never sent in clear text over the
wire. Because this information is not sent on the wire, the
implementer chooses an implementation-specific representation for
this information.
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RFC 7166 Authentication Trailer for OSPFv3 March 2014
Currently, the following algorithms are supported:
* HMAC-SHA-1,
* HMAC-SHA-256,
* HMAC-SHA-384, and
* HMAC-SHA-512.
o Authentication Key
This value denotes the Cryptographic Authentication Key associated
with this OSPFv3 SA. The length of this key is variable and
depends upon the authentication algorithm specified by the
OSPFv3 SA.
o KeyStartAccept
This value indicates the time that this OSPFv3 router will accept
packets that have been created with this OSPFv3 SA.
o KeyStartGenerate
This value indicates the time that this OSPFv3 router will begin
using this OSPFv3 SA for OSPFv3 packet generation.
o KeyStopGenerate
This value indicates the time that this OSPFv3 router will stop
using this OSPFv3 SA for OSPFv3 packet generation.
o KeyStopAccept
This value indicates the time that this OSPFv3 router will stop
accepting packets generated with this OSPFv3 SA.
In order to achieve smooth key transition, KeyStartAccept SHOULD
be less than KeyStartGenerate, and KeyStopGenerate SHOULD be less
than KeyStopAccept. If KeyStartGenerate or KeyStartAccept is left
unspecified, the time will default to 0, and the key will be used
immediately. If KeyStopGenerate or KeyStopAccept is left
unspecified, the time will default to infinity, and the key's
lifetime will be infinite. When a new key replaces an old key,
the KeyStartGenerate time for the new key MUST be less than or
equal to the KeyStopGenerate time of the old key.
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RFC 7166 Authentication Trailer for OSPFv3 March 2014
o Reserved
This field is reserved. It SHOULD be set to 0 when sending
protocol packets and MUST be ignored when receiving protocol
packets.
o Security Association Identifier (SA ID)
This 16-bit field maps to the authentication algorithm and the
secret key used to create the message digest appended to the
OSPFv3 protocol packet.
Though the SA ID implies the algorithm, the HMAC output size
should not be used by implementers as an implicit hint, because
additional algorithms may be defined in the future that have the
same output size.
o Cryptographic Sequence Number
This is a 64-bit strictly increasing sequence number that is used
to guard against replay attacks. The 64-bit sequence number MUST
be incremented for every OSPFv3 packet sent by the OSPFv3 router.
Upon reception, the sequence number MUST be greater than the
sequence number in the last accepted OSPFv3 packet of the same
OSPFv3 packet type from the sending OSPFv3 neighbor. Otherwise,
the OSPFv3 packet is considered a replayed packet and dropped.
OSPFv3 packets of different types may arrive out of order if they
are prioritized as recommended in [RFC4222].
OSPFv3 routers implementing this specification MUST use available
mechanisms to preserve the sequence number's strictly increasing
property for the deployed life of the OSPFv3 router (including
cold restarts). One mechanism for accomplishing this would be to
use the high-order 32 bits of the sequence number as a wrap/boot
count that is incremented anytime the OSPFv3 router loses its
sequence number state. Sequence number wrap is described in
Section 4.1.1.
o Authentication Data
This field contains variable data that is carrying the digest for
the protocol packet and optional LLS data block.
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RFC 7166 Authentication Trailer for OSPFv3 March 20144.1.1. Sequence Number Wrap
When incrementing the sequence number for each transmitted OSPFv3
packet, the sequence number should be treated as an unsigned 64-bit
value. If the lower-order 32-bit value wraps, the higher-order
32-bit value should be incremented and saved in non-volatile storage.
If by some chance the OSPFv3 router is deployed long enough that
there is a possibility that the 64-bit sequence number may wrap, all
keys, independent of their key distribution mechanism, MUST be reset
to avoid the possibility of replay attacks. Once the keys have been
changed, the higher-order sequence number can be reset to 0 and saved
to non-volatile storage.
4.2. OSPFv3 Header Checksum and LLS Data Block Checksum
Both the checksum calculation and verification are omitted for the
OSPFv3 header checksum and the LLS data block checksum [RFC5613] when
the OSPFv3 authentication mechanism described in this specification
is used. This implies the following:
o For OSPFv3 packets to be transmitted, the OSPFv3 header checksum
computation is omitted, and the OSPFv3 header checksum SHOULD be
set to 0 prior to computation of the OSPFv3 Authentication Trailer
message digest.
o For OSPFv3 packets including an LLS data block to be transmitted,
the OSPFv3 LLS data block checksum computation is omitted, and the
OSPFv3 LLS data block checksum SHOULD be set to 0 prior to
computation of the OSPFv3 Authentication Trailer message digest.
o For received OSPFv3 packets including an OSPFv3 Authentication
Trailer, OSPFv3 header checksum verification MUST be omitted.
However, if the OSPFv3 packet does include a non-zero OSPFv3
header checksum, it will not be modified by the receiver and will
simply be included in the OSPFv3 Authentication Trailer message
digest verification.
o For received OSPFv3 packets including an LLS data block and OSPFv3
Authentication Trailer, LLS data block checksum verification MUST
be omitted. However, if the OSPFv3 packet does include an LLS
data block with a non-zero checksum, it will not be modified by
the receiver and will simply be included in the OSPFv3
Authentication Trailer message digest verification.
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RFC 7166 Authentication Trailer for OSPFv3 March 20144.3. Cryptographic Authentication Procedure
As noted earlier, the SA ID maps to the authentication algorithm and
the secret key used to generate and verify the message digest. This
specification discusses the computation of OSPFv3 Cryptographic
Authentication data when any of the NIST SHS family of algorithms is
used in the Hashed Message Authentication Code (HMAC) mode.
The currently valid algorithms (including mode) for OSPFv3
Cryptographic Authentication include:
o HMAC-SHA-1,
o HMAC-SHA-256,
o HMAC-SHA-384, and
o HMAC-SHA-512.
Of the above, implementations of this specification MUST include
support for at least HMAC-SHA-256 and SHOULD include support for
HMAC-SHA-1 and MAY also include support for HMAC-SHA-384 and
HMAC-SHA-512.
Implementations of this specification MUST use HMAC-SHA-256 as the
default authentication algorithm.
4.4. Cross-Protocol Attack Mitigation
In order to prevent cross-protocol replay attacks for protocols
sharing common keys, the two-octet OSPFv3 Cryptographic Protocol ID
is appended to the Authentication Key prior to use. Other protocols
using Cryptographic Authentication as specified herein MUST similarly
append their respective Cryptographic Protocol IDs to their keys in
this step. Refer to the IANA Considerations (Section 7).
4.5. Cryptographic Aspects
In the algorithm description below, the following nomenclature, which
is consistent with [FIPS-198-1], is used:
H is the specific hashing algorithm (e.g., SHA-256).
K is the Authentication Key from the OSPFv3 Security Association.
Ks is a Protocol-Specific Authentication Key obtained by appending
Authentication Key (K) with the two-octet OSPFv3 Cryptographic
Protocol ID.
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RFC 7166 Authentication Trailer for OSPFv3 March 2014
Ko is the cryptographic key used with the hash algorithm.
B is the block size of H, measured in octets rather than bits. Note
that B is the internal block size, not the hash size.
For SHA-1 and SHA-256: B == 64
For SHA-384 and SHA-512: B == 128
L is the length of the hash, measured in octets rather than bits.
XOR is the exclusive-or operation.
Opad is the hexadecimal value 0x5c repeated B times.
Ipad is the hexadecimal value 0x36 repeated B times.
Apad is a value that is the same length as the hash output or message
digest. The first 16 octets contain the IPv6 source address followed
by the hexadecimal value 0x878FE1F3 repeated (L-16)/4 times. This
implies that hash output is always a length of at least 16 octets.
1. Preparation of the Key
The OSPFv3 Cryptographic Protocol ID is appended to the
Authentication Key (K), yielding a Protocol-Specific
Authentication Key (Ks). In this application, Ko is always
L octets long. While [RFC2104] supports a key that is up to
B octets long, this application uses L as the Ks length consistent
with [RFC4822], [RFC5310], and [RFC5709]. According to
[FIPS-198-1], Section 3, keys greater than L octets do not
significantly increase the function strength. Ks is computed as
follows:
If Ks is L octets long, then Ko is equal to Ks. If Ks is more
than L octets long, then Ko is set to H(Ks). If Ks is less
than L octets long, then Ko is set to the value of Ks, with
zeros appended to the end of Ks such that Ko is L octets long.
2. First-Hash
First, the OSPFv3 packet's Authentication Data field in the
Authentication Trailer is filled with the value Apad. This is
very similar to the appendage described in [RFC2328],
Appendix D.4.3, Items (6)(a) and (6)(d)).
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RFC 7166 Authentication Trailer for OSPFv3 March 2014
Then, a First-Hash, also known as the inner hash, is computed as
follows:
First-Hash = H(Ko XOR Ipad || (OSPFv3 Packet))
When XORing Ko and Ipad, Ko will be padded with zeros to the
length of Ipad.
Implementation Note: The First-Hash above includes the
Authentication Trailer as well as the OSPFv3 packet as per
[RFC2328], Appendix D.4.3, and the LLS data block, if present
[RFC5613].
The definition of Apad (above) ensures that it is always the same
length as the hash output. This is consistent with RFC 2328.
Note that the "(OSPFv3 Packet)" referenced in the First-Hash
function above includes both the optional LLS data block and the
OSPFv3 Authentication Trailer.
The digest length for SHA-1 is 20 octets; for SHA-256, 32 octets;
for SHA-384, 48 octets; and for SHA-512, 64 octets.
3. Second-Hash
Then a Second-Hash, also known as the outer hash, is computed as
follows:
Second-Hash = H(Ko XOR Opad || First-Hash)
When XORing Ko and Opad, Ko will be padded with zeros to the
length of Opad.
4. Result
The resulting Second-Hash becomes the authentication data that is
sent in the Authentication Trailer of the OSPFv3 packet. The
length of the authentication data is always identical to the
message digest size of the specific hash function H that is
being used.
This also means that the use of hash functions with larger output
sizes will also increase the size of the OSPFv3 packet as
transmitted on the wire.
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RFC 7166 Authentication Trailer for OSPFv3 March 2014
Implementation Note: [RFC2328], Appendix D specifies that the
Authentication Trailer is not counted in the OSPF packet's own
Length field but is included in the packet's IP Length field.
Similar to this, the Authentication Trailer is not included in
the OSPFv3 header length but is included in the IPv6 header
payload length.
4.6. Message Verification
A router would determine that OSPFv3 is using an Authentication
Trailer (AT) by examining the AT-bit in the Options field in the
OSPFv3 header for Hello and Database Description packets. The
specification in the Hello and Database Description options indicates
that other OSPFv3 packets will include the Authentication Trailer.
The AT is accessed using the OSPFv3 packet header length to access
the data after the OSPFv3 packet and, if an LLS data block [RFC5613]
is present, using the LLS data block length to access the data after
the LLS data block. The L-bit in the OSPFv3 options in Hello and
Database Description packets is examined to determine if an LLS data
block is present. If an LLS data block is present (as specified by
the L-bit), it is included along with the OSPFv3 Hello or Database
Description packet in the Cryptographic Authentication computation.
Due to the placement of the AT following the LLS data block and the
fact that the LLS data block is included in the Cryptographic
Authentication computation, OSPFv3 routers supporting this
specification MUST minimally support examining the L-bit in the
OSPFv3 options and using the length in the LLS data block to access
the AT. It is RECOMMENDED that OSPFv3 routers supporting this
specification fully support OSPFv3 Link-Local Signaling [RFC5613].
If usage of the AT, as specified herein, is configured for an OSPFv3
link, OSPFv3 Hello and Database Description packets with the AT-bit
clear in the options will be dropped. All OSPFv3 packet types will
be dropped if the AT is configured for the link and the IPv6 header
length is less than the amount necessary to include an Authentication
Trailer.
The receiving interface's OSPFv3 SA is located using the SA ID in the
received AT. If the SA is not found, or if the SA is not valid for
reception (i.e., current time < KeyStartAccept or
current time >= KeyStopAccept), the OSPFv3 packet is dropped.
If the cryptographic sequence number in the AT is less than or equal
to the last sequence number in the last OSPFv3 packet of the same
OSPFv3 type successfully received from the neighbor, the OSPFv3
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RFC 7166 Authentication Trailer for OSPFv3 March 2014
packet MUST be dropped, and an error event SHOULD be logged. OSPFv3
packets of different types may arrive out of order if they are
prioritized as recommended in [RFC4222].
Authentication-algorithm-dependent processing needs to be performed,
using the algorithm specified by the appropriate OSPFv3 SA for the
received packet.
Before an implementation performs any processing, it needs to save
the values of the Authentication Data field from the Authentication
Trailer appended to the OSPFv3 packet.
It should then set the Authentication Data field with Apad before the
authentication data is computed (as described in Section 4.5). The
calculated data is compared with the received authentication data in
the Authentication Trailer. If the two do not match, the packet MUST
be discarded, and an error event SHOULD be logged.
After the OSPFv3 packet has been successfully authenticated,
implementations MUST store the 64-bit cryptographic sequence number
for each OSPFv3 packet type received from the neighbor. The saved
cryptographic sequence numbers will be used for replay checking for
subsequent packets received from the neighbor.
5. Migration and Backward Compatibility
All OSPFv3 routers participating on a link SHOULD be migrated to
OSPFv3 authentication at the same time. As with OSPFv2
authentication, a mismatch in the SA ID, Authentication Type, or
message digest will result in failure to form an adjacency. For
multi-access links, communities of OSPFv3 routers could be migrated
using different Interface Instance IDs. However, at least one router
would need to form adjacencies between both the OSPFv3 routers
including and not including the Authentication Trailer. This would
result in sub-optimal routing as well as added complexity and is only
recommended in cases where authentication is desired on the link and
migrating all the routers on the link at the same time isn't
feasible.
In support of uninterrupted deployment, an OSPFv3 router implementing
this specification MAY implement a transition mode where it includes
the Authentication Trailer in transmitted packets but does not verify
this information in received packets. This is provided as a
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RFC 7166 Authentication Trailer for OSPFv3 March 2014
transition aid for networks in the process of migrating to the
authentication mechanism described in this specification. More
specifically:
1. OSPFv3 routers in transition mode will include the OSPFv3
Authentication Trailer in transmitted packets and set the AT-bit
in the Options field of transmitted Hello and Database Description
packets. OSPFv3 routers receiving these packets and not having
authentication configured will ignore the Authentication Trailer
and AT-bit.
2. OSPFv3 routers in transition mode will also calculate and set the
OSPFv3 header checksum and the LLS data block checksum in
transmitted packets so that they will not be dropped by OSPFv3
routers without authentication configured.
3. OSPFv3 routers in transition mode will authenticate received
packets that either have the AT-bit set in the Options field for
Hello or Database Description packets or are from a neighbor that
previously set the AT-bit in the Options field of successfully
authenticated Hello and Database Description packets.
4. OSPFv3 routers in transition mode will also accept packets without
the Options field AT-bit set in Hello and Database Description
packets. These packets will be assumed to be from OSPFv3 routers
without authentication configured, and they will not be
authenticated. Additionally, the OSPFv3 header checksum and LLS
data block checksum will be validated.
6. Security Considerations
This document proposes extensions to OSPFv3 that would make it more
secure than OSPFv3 as defined in [RFC5340]. It does not provide
confidentiality, as a routing protocol contains information that does
not need to be kept secret. It does, however, provide means to
authenticate the sender of packets that are of interest. It
addresses all the security issues that have been identified in
[RFC6039] and [RFC6506].
It should be noted that the authentication method described in this
document is not being used to authenticate the specific originator of
a packet but rather is being used to confirm that the packet has
indeed been issued by a router that has access to the
Authentication Key.
Deployments SHOULD use sufficiently long and random values for the
Authentication Key so that guessing and other cryptographic attacks
on the key are not feasible in their environments. Furthermore, it
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RFC 7166 Authentication Trailer for OSPFv3 March 2014
is RECOMMENDED that Authentication Keys incorporate at least 128
pseudorandom bits to minimize the risk of such attacks. In support
of these recommendations, management systems SHOULD support
hexadecimal input of Authentication Keys.
Deployments that support a transitionary state but interoperate with
routers that do not support this authentication method may be exposed
to unauthenticated data during the transition period.
The mechanism described herein is not perfect and does not need to be
perfect. Instead, this mechanism represents a significant increase
in the effort required for an adversary to successfully attack the
OSPFv3 protocol, while not causing undue implementation, deployment,
or operational complexity.
Refer to [RFC4552] for additional considerations on manual keying.
7. IANA Considerations
This document obsoletes RFC 6506; thus, IANA has updated the
references in existing registries that pointed to RFC 6506 to point
to this document. This is the only IANA action requested by this
document.
IANA previously allocated the AT-bit (0x000400) in the "OSPFv3
Options (24 bits)" registry as described in Section 2.1.
IANA previously created the "Open Shortest Path First v3 (OSPFv3)
Authentication Trailer Options" registry. This registry includes the
"OSPFv3 Authentication Types" registry, which defines valid values
for the Authentication Type field in the OSPFv3 Authentication
Trailer. The registration procedure is Standards Action [RFC5226].
+-------------+-----------------------------------+
|Value | Designation |
+-------------+-----------------------------------+
| 0 | Reserved |
| | |
| 1 | HMAC Cryptographic Authentication |
| | |
| 2-65535 | Unassigned |
+-------------+-----------------------------------+
OSPFv3 Authentication Types
Finally, IANA previously created the "Keying and Authentication for
Routing Protocols (KARP) Parameters" registry. This registry
includes the "Cryptographic Protocol ID" registry, which provides
Bhatia, et al. Standards Track [Page 18]

RFC 7166 Authentication Trailer for OSPFv3 March 2014Appendix A. Acknowledgments
First and foremost, thanks to the US National Institute of Standards
and Technology for their work on the SHA [FIPS-180-4] and HMAC
[FIPS-198-1].
Thanks also need to go to the authors of the HMAC-SHA authentication
RFCs, including [RFC4822], [RFC5310], and [RFC5709]. The basic
HMAC-SHA procedures were originally described by Ran Atkinson in
[RFC4822].
Also, thanks to Ran Atkinson for help in the analysis of RFC 6506
errata.
Thanks to Srinivasan K L and Marek Karasek for their identification
and submission of RFC 6506 errata.
Thanks to Sam Hartman for discussions on replay mitigation and the
use of a 64-bit strictly increasing sequence number. Also, thanks to
Sam for comments during IETF last call with respect to the OSPFv3 SA
and the sharing of keys between protocols.
Thanks to Michael Barnes for numerous comments and strong input on
the coverage of LLS by the Authentication Trailer (AT).
Thanks to Marek Karasek for providing the specifics with respect to
backward-compatible transition mode.
Thanks to Michael Dubrovskiy and Anton Smirnov for comments on
document revisions.
Thanks to Rajesh Shetty for numerous comments, including the
suggestion to include an Authentication Type field in the
Authentication Trailer for extendibility.
Thanks to Uma Chunduri for suggesting that we may want to protect the
IPv6 source address even though OSPFv3 uses the Router ID for
neighbor identification.
Thanks to Srinivasan K L, Shraddha H, Alan Davey, Russ White, Stan
Ratliff, and Glen Kent for their support and review comments.
Thanks to Alia Atlas for comments made under the purview of the
Routing Directorate review.
Thanks to Stephen Farrell for comments during the IESG review.
Stephen was also involved in the discussion of cross-protocol
attacks.
Bhatia, et al. Standards Track [Page 22]